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Tools and Blades | |||
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| | #1 |
| Senior Member |
How does butternut compare to basswood or pine for carving? There's an auction this weekend and one of the things up for auction is some rough cut butternut. I don't know how much or the dimensions but I thought I'd find out if it's worth bidding on. I started with white pine and switched to basswood. I'm happy with basswood but am willing to expand my horizons if it's not going to frustrate me. Also, I've heard that harder woods should be worked with tools with a different bevel. Would I be able to work butternut with the same tools I use for basswood? thanks, mikeg
__________________ http://mysite.verizon.net/vzeeeill/ |
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| | #2 |
| Guest
Posts: n/a
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I have a beautiful chunk of butternut...I am saving it! Don't ask me what for LOL. I hear it carves very well...but it is a very good looking wood I know that! One day I will figure out something to carve in it....just too pretty to waste it! |
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| | #3 |
| Guest
Posts: n/a
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You can carve butternut with the same tools/bevels you use for basswood. Butternut is easy to carve and one of the most beautiful woods when finished with oil or wax IMO.
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| | #4 |
| Member Join Date: Dec 2001 Location: Springfield, MO
Posts: 57
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If you're going to buy at auction, check with some retailers to determine the going retail price if you don't know what it is. Get to the sale early enough to inspect what they have and make a mental note of what you will be willing to pay and don't let the excitement of the moment cause you to pay more than a fair price, which is very easy to do given the circumstances. Auctions are a lot of fun to attend but can be very costly to someone not familiar with the process. Just set the price you are willing to give and don't go over that amount and you should be fine. Let us know if you get a bargain. : |
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| | #5 |
| Senior Member |
Butternut is a great carving wood, nearly as soft as basswood but much more striking because of it s grain and color. If you intend to keep a natural wood finish, it's the way to go. Mahogany is a little harder and even better looking when you allow the grain and color to show in the finished piece. It shouldn't be much more than about $4/bd-ft. for good, clear wood.
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| | #6 |
| Member |
just an aside to the auction thing... a buddy of mine sells welders for a living and watched in dismay at a farm auction as the used welder was bid up in price. He started paying attention to who was bidding and after it was over approached the losing bidders with an offer to sell them a new one for less than they had bid on the used one... I think he said he made 8 sales that day... buyer beware. |
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| | #7 |
| Guest
Posts: n/a
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Here's one site for comparative prices.....Canadian dollars, I'd guess, so your US cost wold be down around 30% (?). check several mills and find what you can buy for...a lot of small operators willget you a good deal on cutoffs, culls, and over stocks. http://www.kooturlumber.com/lumber.shtml Also check the board foot cost Length times width times thickness in inches, divided by 144 gives you the board feet of a piece. That is usually measure nominally, which means a standard 1x2 is really the finished size of 3/4 x 1 3/4, but you are charged as it were 1x2. |
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| | #8 |
| Guest
Posts: n/a
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Butternut is a wonderful wood to carve. Has the properties of Pine for carving, though a little harder, but has a wonderful colour, rich, deep, hue. A member of the Walnut family I believe, sometimes called Light Walnut. It finishes beautifully, I like using just an oil then dried and a paste wax, on Butternut, but it takes a varnish well. I'd never cover it with a paint, the wood is too beautiful. Nor would i sand it, though you certainly can.....it is just a wood that looks at its best carved and naturally finished. IMHO Get it if you can, if the price is reasonable. I always keep my eyes open for a good supple to have on hand curing. That reminds me, I am getting low in my supply, so I must watch for some at the woodworking show next month. Bob |
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| | #9 |
| Member Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Whooping Hollow (Alpena) AR
Posts: 36
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I would watch the price. Auctions are notorious for both incredible savings and prices waaaay too high. If the price is right, I would buy it. Even if I did not intend immediate use. It carves well with both power and hand tools. Finishes a beautiful light walnut color (sometimes called poor man's walnut). It is getting harder to find (especially 4' and up blocks) down in this part of the country. A wood supplier comes down to the Spring seminar at Silver Dollar City with both bass and butternut. The butternut sells out very fast. Good Luck, Paul Guraedy Whooping Hollow Woods Alpena, ARkansas
__________________ Paul Guraedy Whooping Hollow Woods Alpena, ARkansas |
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| | #10 |
| Guest
Posts: n/a
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Paul, the wood supplier you see at Silver Dollar City in Branson every spring is Dale Heinecke of Cumberland, WI. His phone number is 715 822 8642. (fax - 715-822-3507) He ships bass and butternut by UPS at exact cost all over and the shipping is not as high as you would expect. The wood is some of the best you've ever touched. Give him a call some evening (no email or web site) and see what he's got. You'll also see him at shows around the mid west. I 'think' his next one is the show the first weekend of November in Belleville, IL. |
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